Sunday, September 02, 2012

Bombay Jayashri

I have no Music knowledge. Can't identify the Ragas like Venkat and don't know the difference between the thalams. In fact there is a complete ban on my singing at home, apparently my singing does not sit in sur(am), don't know what that means either!

But, what I know is that I Love Music, almost of all kinds (except Rap and the technosounds that are unfortunately being bandied as Music). Like most of you, some song keeps going on inside my head all the time.

Bombay Jayashri is one of my favorite singers, I have tons of her songs (thanks to Visu for some of those CDs) and she keeps us company when we have this torturous travel to and from office, fidgeting inside the metal cage. I simple love her dark and husky voice, which is very different from most of the classical singers (which is fairly exploited by Harris Jayaraj and co). At the same time she easily scales those highs too, with the clarity and crispness of the winter breeze. There is a soothing, soul stirring quality to her voice. Listen to her sing Ehi Murare or Katyayini and you will understand what I mean (btw, the complete Salokyam album is outstanding and so meditative).

So, when my friend Prashant informed about a Bombay Jayashri concert and offered the tickets, I was ecstatic, to put it mildly.

We left early to hold on to the best seats, up close and bang in front. I could literally see the whites of the artists' eyes. The hall was very basic, but it did not seem to bother the singer or the fans. The program was scheduled to start at 5:15 and it did start precisely at 5:15 and for the next 3 hours we (the Rasikas!) were transported to a different world. A magical world that was full of joy, spirituality and wholesome goodness. During the entire duration, she did not say a word (except for some polite conversations with the accompanying musicians); she did not pause to take a sip of water. She just came, sang, conquered and left.

Pictures here are some that I managed to sneak during the program - the light was not very good and I was nervous, to be sitting just in front and shooting with a camera (even if I was really careful not to disturb).









7 comments:

  1. It's the best possible event that can happen to a fan with an artist. You have narrated the experience very well and glad to know that. Their film songs are the entry tickets to their actual world. True music doesn't need our knowledge but our soul.

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  2. I went on reading and suddenly felt that the piece ended some what abruptly...
    the narration was good till the last line.
    may be u could have mentioned the songs she sang, whether carnatic or hindustani or a rare tamil isai song...


    Rajan

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  3. I went on reading and suddenly felt that the piece ended some what abruptly...
    the narration was good till the last line.
    may be u could have mentioned the songs she sang, whether carnatic or hindustani or a rare tamil isai song...


    Rajan

    ReplyDelete
  4. good narration but somehow i felt it ended abruptly.
    was reading through the flow , could sync with ur wave length and how u approached the event...
    probably u cud have added some of the names of the songs or the genre -carnatic/hindustani...
    not that, it would be enlightening me, but it may have given the piece some sort of completion...just felt like that..

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  5. Hi Rajan, I deliberately kept it the way it is, as I did not want it to be a review of the kutcheri; I am not qualified for that and hence will not do justice. I did not dare to go there :).
    The details, if you are interested: it was a Carnatic concert (She is trained both in Carnatic and Hindustani classical), the audience was predominantly from South of India. Some of the songs were; Enna thavam seithanai, Muruganin maru peyar azhagu, Rama nee samanam evaru, to name a few… She was ably accompanied by Embar Kannan (a star in his own right) on violin, Sai Giridhar on Mridangam and Anirudh Athreya on Kanjira.

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  6. You always amuse me. What is the limit of your interests?
    Well captured ...both in words as well as on shutterbug.

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  7. Anonymous11:23 AM

    தம்பி நீங்க நான் பாடுனத கேட்டிருந்தா எகிமுராரே(correcta) அல்லது காத்யாயினி புரிஞ்சிருக்கும்

    ReplyDelete